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re: NY BIGLAW Salary Raise - $190K for 1st Years

Posted on 6/4/18 at 7:59 pm to
Posted by athenslife101
Member since Feb 2013
18616 posts
Posted on 6/4/18 at 7:59 pm to
Is there any job out there that isn’t miserable at 190k?

Everyone I know who makes more than 150k is busting there arse all the time to just stay in place. It’s a choice to make that money.

One director flat out said, “I got to my current position because i told my boss I wanted to work more and make more money. Then I told him I wanted a break again. Then I said I wanted to get back to making more money and my salary and career advancements flowed based on my dedication to busting my arse.”
Posted by Buckeye06
Member since Dec 2007
23145 posts
Posted on 6/4/18 at 8:06 pm to
quote:

Everyone I know who makes more than 150k is busting there arse all the time to just stay in place. It’s a choice to make that money.



Ehh, i have a great job, make above that, and work probably 45 hours a week. I'm in office on average 8-530. Need to work some weekends and have tough deadlines, but it's not a bad life
Posted by DaBeerz
Member since Sep 2004
17021 posts
Posted on 6/4/18 at 8:14 pm to
quote:

Is there any job out there that isn’t miserable at 190k?

Everyone I know who makes more than 150k is busting there arse all the time to just stay in place. It’s a choice to make that money.


Not everyone hoss... I work about 13-15 days per month with that pay, you just have to choose you field wisely
This post was edited on 6/4/18 at 8:18 pm
Posted by AbuTheMonkey
Chicago, IL
Member since May 2014
8025 posts
Posted on 6/4/18 at 10:18 pm to
quote:

Is there any job out there that isn’t miserable at 190k?

Everyone I know who makes more than 150k is busting there arse all the time to just stay in place. It’s a choice to make that money.

One director flat out said, “I got to my current position because i told my boss I wanted to work more and make more money. Then I told him I wanted a break again. Then I said I wanted to get back to making more money and my salary and career advancements flowed based on my dedication to busting my arse.”



Depends on the field and age, I think.

If you're in the traditionally uber competitive professional services industries (I mentioned above, but investment banking, strategy consulting, big law, some advertising and marketing, tech, and so forth) and relatively young (say, younger than 35 or 40), it will probably be a grind. The promise is always that you can get a job with similar compensation or prestige after you do your time and that new position will be not anywhere nearly as stressful or as demanding. The other promise is that if you keep on grinding like that, you're ceiling is very, very, very high (mid-six or even seven figures) if you're talented enough.

But I know plenty of PA's, web developers, some experienced tradesmen, industrial manufacturing management types, F1000 (and other large firm) junior and mid-level management, etc., etc. that earn in that range without a horrid amount of stress. The difference is that other than those already in management roles with an upward trajectory, their ceilings are capped.
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